Source: The Guardian
Neuroscience breakthroughs could be harnessed by military and law enforcers, says Royal Society report
Neuroscience breakthroughs could be harnessed by military and law enforcers, says Royal Society report
Soldiers could have their minds plugged directly into weapons
systems, undergo brain scans during recruitment and take courses of
neural stimulation to boost their learning, if the armed forces embrace
the latest developments in neuroscience to hone the performance of their troops.
These scenarios are described in a report into the military
and law enforcement uses of neuroscience, published on Tuesday, which
also highlights a raft of legal and ethical concerns that innovations in
the field may bring.
The report by the Royal Society,
the UK's national academy of science, says that while the rapid advance
of neuroscience is expected to benefit society and improve treatments
for brain disease and mental illness, it also has substantial security
applications that should be carefully analysed.
The report's
authors also anticipate new designer drugs that boost performance, make
captives more talkative and make enemy troops fall asleep.
"Neuroscience will have more of an impact in the future," said Rod Flower, chair of the report's working group.
"People can see a lot of possibilities, but so far very few have made their way through to actual use.
"All leaps forward start out this way. You have a groundswell of ideas and suddenly you get a step change."
The
authors argue that while hostile uses of neuroscience and related
technologies are ever more likely, scientists remain almost oblivious to
the dual uses of their research.
The report calls for a fresh effort to educate neuroscientists about such uses of the work early in their careers.
Some
techniques used widely in neuroscience are on the brink of being
adopted by the military to improve the training of soldiers, pilots and
other personnel.
A growing body of research suggests that passing
weak electrical signals through the skull, using transcranial direct
current stimulation (tDCS), can improve people's performance in some
tasks.
One study cited by the report
described how US neuroscientists employed tDCS to improve people's
ability to spot roadside bombs, snipers and other hidden threats in a
virtual reality training programme used by US troops bound for the
Middle East.
"Those who had tDCS learned to spot the targets much
quicker," said Vince Clark, a cognitive neuroscientist and lead author
on the study at the University of New Mexico.
"Their accuracy increased
twice as fast as those who had minimal brain stimulation. I was shocked
that the effect was so large."
Clark, whose wider research on tDCS
could lead to radical therapies for those with dementia, psychiatric
disorders and learning difficulties, admits to a tension in knowing that
neuroscience will be used by the military.
"As a scientist I
dislike that someone might be hurt by my work. I want to reduce
suffering, to make the world a better place, but there are people in the
world with different intentions, and I don't know how to deal with
that.
"If I stop my work, the people who might be helped won't be helped. Almost any technology has a defence application."
Research
with tDCS is in its infancy, but work so far suggests it might help
people by boosting their attention and memory. According to the Royal Society
report, when used with brain imaging systems, tDCS "may prove to be the
much sought-after tool to enhance learning in a military context".
One
of the report's most striking scenarios involves the use of devices
called brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) to connect people's brains
directly to military technology, including drones and other weapons
systems.
The work builds on research that has enabled people to
control cursors and artificial limbs through BMIs that read their brain
signals.
"Since the human brain can process images, such as
targets, much faster than the subject is consciously aware of, a
neurally interfaced weapons system could provide significant advantages
over other system control methods in terms of speed and accuracy," the
report states.
The authors go on to stress the ethical and legal
concerns that surround the use of BMIs by the military. Flower, a
professor of pharmacology at the William Harvey Research Institute at
Barts and the London hospital, said: "If you are controlling a drone and
you shoot the wrong target or bomb a wedding party, who is responsible
for that action? Is it you or the BMI?
"There's a blurring of the
line between individual responsibility and the functioning of the
machine. Where do you stop and the machine begin?"
Another tool
expected to enter military use is the EEG (electroencephalogram), which
uses a hairnet of electrodes to record brainwaves through the skull.
Used with a system called "neurofeedback", people can learn to control
their brainwaves and improve their skills.
According to the report, the technique has been shown to improve training in golfers and archers.
The US military research organisation, Darpa,
has already used EEG to help spot targets in satellite images that were
missed by the person screening them. The EEG traces revealed that the
brain sometimes noticed targets but failed to make them conscious
thoughts. Staff used the EEG traces to select a group of images for
closer inspection and improved their target detection threefold, the
report notes.
Work on brain connectivity has already raised the prospect of using scans to select fast learners during recruitment drives.
Research last year
by Scott Grafton at the University of California, Santa Barbara, drew
on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans to measure the
flexibility of brain networks. They found that a person's flexibility
helped predict how quickly they would learn a new task.
Other studies
suggest neuroscience could help distinguish risk-takers from more
conservative decision-makers, and so help with assessments of whether
they are better suited to peacekeeping missions or special forces, the
report states.
"Informal assessment occurs routinely throughout
the military community. The issue is whether adopting more formal
techniques based on the results of research in neuroeconomics,
neuropsychology and other neuroscience disciplines confers an advantage
in decision-making."